mr.don
11 Feb 2007, 8:14am
Hey,
I'm about to purchase a new HP 9000t notebook, and I really want 2 gigs of RAM to maximize my video editing and Vista performance. It seems much cheaper to buy third-party RAM than pay HP $200 to go from 512 to 2 GB.
From what I can tell I should buy 667 mhz 200-PIN DDR2 RAM (please correct me if this isn't right). Looking around on the web, it seems like there are many different known and unknown brands. Is it worth spending an extra $10 to $20 per chip for names like OCZ and Kingston instead of brands like Corsair, Mushkin, and G.skill?
Newegg has 1 GB sticks of Kingston RAM for $80, which seem like the most appealing ones I can find. Looking around on the Kingston web site, I see RAM "specifically made" for HP Pavilion notebooks (quite a bit more expensive), but from what I can see it is basically the same (667 mhz, 200-pin DDR2). There's no reason (and probably no difference) in buying this special RAM, right?
Finally, installing the RAM should only involve unscrewng the bottom panel of the notebook case, popping out the old 512 stick, and snapping the two new 1 GB ones in (correct?). Should this be done before I boot the system up for the first time, or after everything is set up and configured?
Thank you so much for your help and advice.
-Mr.Don
I'm about to purchase a new HP 9000t notebook, and I really want 2 gigs of RAM to maximize my video editing and Vista performance. It seems much cheaper to buy third-party RAM than pay HP $200 to go from 512 to 2 GB.
From what I can tell I should buy 667 mhz 200-PIN DDR2 RAM (please correct me if this isn't right). Looking around on the web, it seems like there are many different known and unknown brands. Is it worth spending an extra $10 to $20 per chip for names like OCZ and Kingston instead of brands like Corsair, Mushkin, and G.skill?
Newegg has 1 GB sticks of Kingston RAM for $80, which seem like the most appealing ones I can find. Looking around on the Kingston web site, I see RAM "specifically made" for HP Pavilion notebooks (quite a bit more expensive), but from what I can see it is basically the same (667 mhz, 200-pin DDR2). There's no reason (and probably no difference) in buying this special RAM, right?
Finally, installing the RAM should only involve unscrewng the bottom panel of the notebook case, popping out the old 512 stick, and snapping the two new 1 GB ones in (correct?). Should this be done before I boot the system up for the first time, or after everything is set up and configured?
Thank you so much for your help and advice.
-Mr.Don